Author: Linda DeLaine
Website: RL Online
Department:
Page: 1 ( 2) pages
Summary: Soviet cosmonauts Valentina Tereshkova and Svetlana Svitskaya made history when they were the first woman in space and first woman to walk in space, respectfully. Elena V. Kondakova represents the new age of Russian Federation cosmonauts as a member of the US/Russian STS-84 crew.
Colonel-Engineer Valentina Vladimirovna
Tereshkova
Call Sign: Chayka (Seagull)
A fascination with
parachute jumping led Valentina Tereshkova the unlikely, history making role as
the first woman in space.
Unlikely because Valentina, unlike other cosmonauts, had never been a test pilot.
For Valentina, parachute jumping was a hobby. She made her first jump in 1959, at age 22, as part of the Aviation Club from Yaroslavl. At the time, she was working at the local textile mill and formed a workers parachute club there. In 1961, Valentina became the secretary of the local Young Communist League and joined the Communist Party in 1962.
Valentina was born on March 6, 1937, in the village of Maslennikovo, in the Yaroslavl region. Her father died in WWII and her mother, Elena Fedorovna, worked in the local textile mill and raised Valentina and her sister and brother. Valentina's education began at age 8 and she left to go to work in 1953 at age 16. In 1961, she earned a certification as a cotton spinning expert.
Five women were selected, on February 16, 1962, as cosmonaut trainees. Valentina was one of them and underwent the rigorous training program which included 120 jumps. Valentina did extremely well in the physical aspects of her training, but had trouble with the engineering topics. Sergei Pavlovich Korolev, the Soviet chief rocket designer, was responsible for the novel idea of placing a woman in space. Even so, the final decision as to which woman would make the flight belonged solely to Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
Vostok 5 was launched on June 14, 1963. The flight, with cosmonaut Valeri Bykovsky on board, was relatively unsuccessful. Intended to be in orbit for 8 days, Vostok 5 had troubles from the start and was finally forced down after 5 days in space. On June 16, 1963, Vostok 6, with Valentina Tereshkova on board, was launched. This was to be a joint mission with Vostok 5 and the primary mission was to collect data on the effects of space flight on men and women. Valentina came within roughly 5 km of Vostok 5 and made radio contact with Bykovsky. Korolev, not pleased with Valentina's abilities suggesting that she was psychologically instable, never allowed her to take control of Vostok 6; she was, basically, along for the ride as a subject in a great experiment.
The one thing that could not be denied her was the fact that she became the first woman in the world to fly in space. There would not be another female Russian cosmonaut until Svetlana Svitskaya in 1982. Valentina completed three days in orbit, returning to Earth on June 19, 1963, just three hours before Vostok 5. After entering Earth's atmosphere, Valentina parachuted from her space craft, landing roughly 380 miles northeast of Karaganda, Kazakhstan. Vostok 6 was recovered the same day at the geographical location of 53:16 N/ 80:27 E, east of where Valentina landed.
The Soviet space program had one eligible bachelor; Andrian Nikolayev. Nikolayev had flown aboard Vostok 3 on August 11, 1962. Rumors began that Valentina and Andrian were an item. This was not the case. The rumors eventually reached the ear of Premier Khrushchev who thought that such a union would be a wonderful and novel thing. He turned on the pressure and Valentina and Andrian were wed on November 3, 1963. The ceremony took place at the Moscow Wedding Palace with Khrushchev presiding. Seven months later, on June 8, 1964, Valentina gave birth to the couple's only child, a daughter named Elena Andrionovna. Elena grew up and became a doctor.
Valentina's marriage to Andrian did not last long. After Elena's birth, Valentina attended the Zhukovskiy Military Air Academy and earned her college degree in October, 1969. The female division of the Soviet space program was done away with after Valentina's graduation.
Soviet space flight did not include women until the 1980s when it became apparent that the U.S. would be including women on Shuttle missions on a regular basis. Recruitment for female cosmonauts began in earnest. The next Soviet woman in space was Svetlana Savitskaya who flew in 1982 and 1984. Soyuz T-15 was supposed to be an all female crew and was scheduled to launch on National Women's Day, 1985. Instead, Soyuz T-15 launched in March of 1986 with a two man crew.
Valentina did not allow the fact that she would never again fly in space keep her from being active in Soviet life. She represented the Soviet government in many worldwide women's organizations. Valentina served as a member of the World Peace Council (1966) and the Union of the Supreme Soviet (1966 - 74). In 1974, Valentina was elected to the presidium of the Supreme Soviet and served as the Soviet Union's representative to the UN Conference for International Women's Year in Mexico City (1975). Valentina was designated as a deputy to the Supreme Soviet, Vice President of International Woman's Democratic Federation and was President of the Soviet-Algerian Friendship Society.
When the Soviet era came to an end, Valentina lost all of her political standings. A resident of Star City, northeast of Moscow, the former cosmonaut currently heads the government center for international scientific and cultural cooperation.
Honors:
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